150 likes | 232 Views
January 15, 2014. New classroom ( yay adventure walk) Terms from our Reading Socrative1: Buckland article Lecture: What is a document Socrative 2: O ther articles In class reflection essay Assignment: Organizing in the real world.
E N D
January 15, 2014 • New classroom (yay adventure walk) • Terms from our Reading • Socrative1: Buckland article • Lecture: What is a document • Socrative 2: Other articles • In class reflection essay • Assignment: Organizing in the real world Slides and materials available at: http://sites.duke.edu/holliewhite/2014/01/07/inls-520/
Socrative 1: Buckland article Socrates as portrayed by Tony Steedman In Bill and Ted’s Excellent Adventure (1989) Buckland Reading: http://people.ischool.berkeley.edu/~buckland/whatdoc.html
Is this a document? Fountain by Marcel Duchamp 1917…photo taken by Alfred Stiegliz
Some definitions…. • Buckland • “any phenomena that someone may wish to observe: events, processes, images, and objects as well as texts.” (Buckland, 1997) • Otlet • “objects themselves can be regarded as documents if you are informed by observation of them”, 3 dimensionality (Buckland, 1997) • Briet • “evidence in support of a fact” (Buckland, 1997) • Greenberg • “Any entity, form or mode for which contextual data can be recorded” (Greenberg, 2002, 2003) Slide Created by Dr. Jane Greenberg
Document (Briet) • Object • Star in the sky • Photo of star • Stone in the River • Stone in museum • Animal in the wild • Animal in the zoo • Document? • NO • YES • No • Yes • No • Yes Do we agree with Briet’s classifications? Modified from a slide created by Dr. Jane Greenberg
What is a document? Simple/Atomic, familiar document types Complex, compound, dynamic document types Slide Created by Dr. Jane Greenberg Adapted from: http://www2.cs.cornell.edu/payette/fedora/ecdl98.ppt
What is a Document? A Terminology Issue • Information object • Document • Information resource • Information bearing entity • Bibliographic entity • Exist in the world of recorded knowledge… Slide Created by Dr. Jane Greenberg
Information Objects, W3C • W3C/IETF definition of resource is “…anything that has identity. Familiar examples include an electronic document, an image, a service (e.g., "today's weather report for Los Angeles"), and a collection of other resources. Not all resources are network "retrievable"; e.g., human beings, corporations, and bound books in a library can also be considered resources.” • i.e. a resource is “anything” • physical things (books, cars, people) • digital things (Web pages, digital images) • conceptual things (colours,points in time, subjects) Slide Created by Dr. Jane Greenberg
Information Objects • Print (Physical) / Digital (Electronic) • Linear (flat) / Hypertext • Static / Dynamic • Durable / Ephemeral • Atomic / Complex Slide Created by Dr. Jane Greenberg
What type of documents or information objects can we put in our information systems? Let’s make a list:
Socrative 2: Other articles Miner, E. A., and Missen, C. (2005). ‘Internet in a Box’: Augmenting Bandwidth with the eGranary Digital Library.” Africa Today, 52 (2): 21–37. Qvenild, M. (2008). Svalbard Global Seed Vault: A ‘Noah’s Ark’ for the World’s Seeds. Development in Practice, 18 (1): 110– 116.
In class reflection essay… The Miner & Missen and Qvenild pieces, discuss two non traditional collections. What type of documents are these collections housing? Brainstorm and describe the types of unique organizing issues that may occur in these situations.
Assignment 1:Organization in the Real World http://sites.duke.edu/holliewhite/files/2014/01/Organization-in-the-real-world.pdf
Readings for Next week • Jones, W. & Teevan, J. (2007). Introduction. In W. Jones and J. Teevan (EDs.), Personal Information Management. London: University of Washington Press. • Kwasnik, B. H. (1989). How a Personal Document's Intended Use or Purpose Affects Its Classification in an Office. In: Proceedings of the 12th Annual International ACM SIGIR Conference on Research and Development in Information Retrieval. New York: ACM, p. 207-210.